WHAT
As America's Catholic bishops begin to meet, clergy molestation victims
will hold a sidewalk news conference urging church officials to toughen,
not weaken, their national sex abuse guidelines and blast them for backpedaling
on their promises

WHEN
TODAY, Thursday, June 16, 2:30 p.m

WHERE
On the bridge across from the Fairmont Hotel, (200 North Columbus) in
downtown Chicago (where 300 American Catholic bishops are staying and
meeting this week)

WHO
Three or four clergy sex abuse victims who are leaders of SNAP, the Survivors
Network of those Abused by Priests, a nation-wide support group

VISUAL
The group will physically tear up copies of the bishops' abuse policy,
deploring its weakness and sporadic enforcement.

WHY
After just three years, an already weak and vague set of national abuse
guidelines will be furthered watered down, as bishops this week will likely
vote to
- enable themselves to block sex abuse cases using the church's internal
statute of limitations,
- make the definition of sexual abuse more vague,
- reduce the role of the National Review Board and
- require that its members be vetted by local bishops.

SNAP is also upset that not a single US bishop is proposing measures to
strengthen the so-called Dallas Charter.

Comments in the proposed revision also suggest that in the future, many
bishops want to renege on their "one strike and you're out"
pledge and appoint clergy to the Review Board, in addition to or instead
of Catholic lay people.

Yesterday, SNAP called on bishops to create a nationwide reward fund to
encourage people to report suspected sexual misconduct by church employees,
and reform their national abuse policy to require "real outreach"
not passive public relations, to find and help more victims and enable
more criminal prosecution of predators.